Rino a écrit:
Jean Guernon <jguernon@globetrotter.net> a écrit dans le message :
tW0jb.6065632$cI2.857388@news.easynews.com...
Rino Mailloux a écrit:
Peter Lemesurier <lemesur@bengalwipeyethisoutvillas.demon.co.uk> wrote
in message news:<9opkovg9us6ajl2usp7oftibuglviv4pic@4ax.com>...
On 12 Oct 2003 16:17:57 -0700,
(Rino
Mailloux) either wrote or (if so marked) quoted:
If you're not referring to Malachy, *Nostradamus's* prophecies on the
subject basically cover the decline of the Church (and the papacy)
thanks to corruption, declining morals etc., then its final overthrow
in Europe by a massive Muslim invasion, before it is finally restored
by a future Christian King of France who drives the Muslims back to
the Middle East and converts them to Christianity (!!).
Where do you get this Muslim invasion of Europe in Nostradamus?
From what he actually says -- again and again and again!
Give one quatrain where he is telling so?
Rino
Rino, most of the quatrains concerning the future are about the upcoming
Muslim
invasion.
Not really invasion!
Well, upcoming war, and ensuing occupation and of course resistance, and the
ousting of the enemy, the invasion is but a part of it of course.
It will be like you tell me about Q.8,48
I don't understand what you mean; 8,48 is behind us (it is about the peace
following the defeat of Charles II against Cromwell, in 1651, the events of La
Fronde in French Guyana and the subduing of the revolt of the Spanish Catalans
in 1652).
Michel had a future view on many quatrains, but at the same time he gave
light on what it could look like!
Rino
Not sure I follow what you mean. I believe that the quatrains are prophecies,
the events depicted are sure to happen.
J.
If you want to check them out, look at:
http://www.michelnostradamus.org/quatrainsfuture.html
J.
That's why my 'Nostradamus -- The Next 50 Years' and its later version
'Nostradamus in the 21st Century' were able to detail it in such
extraordinary precision.
Only AFTER they had been published did I discover that that was
precisely the scenario outlined in the Mirabilis Liber, which had
clearly been his major source -- and which it looks as if you haven't
even bothered to look at yet.
But then I suppose that would be par for the course, wouldn't it?...
:(
.